THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT. Oc:. : SILVER GOOD AS GOLD OPEN MINT8 AND MAKE WHITE METAL GOOD A8 YELLOW. ( V 50-Cen Dollar This Is Wot Qnee tSoa ef Bullion, bnt of Remonetlsed, Debt-Paying Coined Money. Austin, Tex., Oct 5, 1896. One of the scare crows used by the . advocates of the single gold standard is the false representation that If the policy of the free and unlimited coin age of silver should be adopted it would cut in two the wages of laborers and , compel them to take 50-cent dollars without an Increase of the rate of their wages; that those receiving salaries would get but one-half the pay they now receive; that those having money on deposit in savings banks would only receive from the banks in return for their deposits, 60- cent dollars, which would be but the one-half of what would be due them; that the endow ment funds of colleges and universities would be reduced one-half In value; as would all trust funds. This frightful statement is repeated day by day by the newspapers and other advocates of the single gold standard, as a controlling argument, to prevent the people from voting for the candidates who represent the policy of the free and unlimited coinage of silver. The newspapers and men who are urg ing this statement know it to be a stupendous falsehood. They make It look as plausible as they can, and ring the changes on it in every possible form. And by this means have de ceived and are deceiving and mislead ing thousands of honest people, who may not be able to detect the fraud which is being practiced on them. "What are the real facts as to this? The gold standard advocates, as the basis of their false statements, com pare silver bullion divested of the qual ity of money, uncoined and not a legal tender, with gold, which is by law coined into money and made a legal tender in payment of public dues and all debts, to the amount stamped on . each coin. Is this an honest com parison? Does it speak the truth? Does it not, in effect, assert a, thinly , disguised, but gross and monstrous, falsehood? Let us see. If congress and the nations should prevent the coinage of gold bullion, as has been done as to silver bullion, depriving it by law of the qualities of money, tak ing from it Its debt-paying quality, then the gold bullion would not be money, no more than silver bullion is now. And the gold bullion would be come a commodity as silver bullion is now, and would simply bring what it would be worth for use in the arts. The same, is true as to silver. To make an honest comparison of gold and silver," and to tell the honest truth, we must compare gold coin, in vested with the legal tender quality, with silver coin invested with the aame quality. Doing that, we find the silver coins in the United States, not silver bullion, worth as much in the purchase of property and in the payment of debts as the coins of gold. And we find that more than one billion of dol lars of silver coins in circulation in Europe are at par with gold. Why Is this? Simply because both are coined with the value of the coins fixed by law. Has any one ever seen a 50-cent dol lar in this country? Of course not. And why not? Because our more than 1400,000,000 silver dollars, or their rep resentatives, are the coined money of the United States, their value fixed by law and they are made a legal tender for all debts. Hence, those now coin ed are as good as gold. ' No laborer, no person drawing a sal ary, no depositor in a bank will be paid, nor will any offer be made to pay them, with silver bullion. They may . be paid in coined silver, as they may now be lawfully paid in coined silver; but the dollars in which they could be so paid would be 100-cent dollars, and equal to gold, because they would buy as much property and pay as much of debt as the same number of gold dol lars. If it be said that the stamp of the government and the mandate of the law make the coin of greater value than the bullion, the answer may be made that the present value of gold is fixed by law. ( An act of the British parliament passed in the year 1844, fifty-two years ago, requires the Bank of England to purchase all the gold presented to it at 8 pounds, 17 shillings and 9 pence per ounce. That fixes the price all over the world, less the cost of trans portation to London. So that its price Is not governed by its intrinsic value, but by an act of parliament; and this makes it in that senee fiat money. Money is the creature of law. The material of which it is made is not money until made so by law, whether It be gold or silver or paper. The government or the banks issue their notes to circulate as money. These notes have no intrinsic value. Their being money arises from the fact that their issue is authorized by law, the promise to redeem them in coin, and, In some cases, the making of them a legal tender. So that it is the opera . tion of Uhe law which makes money, and not the material of which it ia composed; though gold and silver are recognized as more suitable materia out of which to make money than any thing else. If gold and silver-bullion were mon ey, why the laws of this and other' ountries denning the degree of fine Bess of the metal, the f mount of alloy la the coins, their w ight, and the Value of each coin, and .naking them a legal tender? ', The falsehood resorts to by the gold standard advocates h? for its oblect to deoeive the American people tnU voting for a policy by whioh one-half of the standard money of this country was stricken down, thus reducing the volume of the money which fixed he values of all the other property, from 17.500,000,000 to 13.250,000,000; and making a corresponding reduction in property values; paralyzing Industry, arresting 'enterprise, rendering agri culture, the controlling industry of this country, unprofitable; producing an amount of financial distress and of bankruptcy such as was never before known in this country and causing tens of thousands of men to be denied em ployment and their families to suffer for the want of the necessaries of life, and causing those who still have work to work on short time, and filling the country with tramps. All this wrong and suffering in order to Increase the value of bonds and other credits and money in the hands of the rich, while sinking the great mass of the people, the working people, the common peo ple, the real creators of wealth, deep er and deeper into poverty and wretch edness. Will the people allow themselves to be deceived by .such a device into help ing to perpetuate the gold standard policy, and to put themselves into a condition of financial slavery to the money changers and aristocrats of America and Europe? The man who talks about 50-cent dollars shows his Ignorance on the sub ject; or, If he is not ignorant, that he is attempting by falsehood and fraud to deceive others to their great injury. Tou may inquire what Influence I think the free and unlimited coinage of silver, at the ratio of 16 to 1, will have on the purchasing power of gold and silver money. If such coinage shall Increase the volume of circulat ing money the effect will be, to the ex tent of that Increase, to raise the prices of commodities, and in the same pro portion to reduce the purchasing power of money. , Stated in another way, it will make property dearer and money cheaper in proportion to the amount of the increase of the volume of mon ey. And this is the reason why the plutocrats so earnestly oppose free coinage. It is their policy and to their interest to have dear money and cheap property and labor. While it is to the interest and should be the policy of the Industrial classes, who make the wealth of the country, to have a suf ficient supply of money to stimulate enterprise and industry, and make the country prosperous and the people con tented and happy. And by restoring silver as a part of the standard money the demand for gold will be somewhat reduced, and it will, to that extent be less valuable as compared with the property of the country. But the free coinage of silver will cause no serious disturbance to the business of the country. JOHN H. REAGAN. REV. ISAAC W. HIQQS. National Party' Nomine for Governor , of Illinois, Beil(oi and , Supports; Bryan, Altgeld and Free Silver. Rev. Isaac W. Higgs has resigned the nomination of the National party for governor of Illinois, and has ac companied his resignation with an ad--dress to his party from whioh the fol lowing is .taken: "I am also constrained to say that I shall cast my vote and Influence in support of the Chicago Democratic platform and its candidates, and would be glad to have every Nationalist in the state do the same, as I believe that, next to the National party, the Demo cratic party best represents the inter ests of the great mass of the common people, and suffrage to the papapapa people, and that in the future the privileges and the liberties of a free suffrage to the wage earners of th nation will largely depend upon the result of this coming election." Rev. Mr. Higgs makes a strong ar raignment of the great corporations for coercing dependent labor, . de nounces the political methods of Wall street, as exploited by Henry Clews, and closes with a strong appeal to the members of the National party to cast their votes for Bryan and Altgeld and free silver. NOT AFRAID OF FREE SILVER. Free Colnag a Will Enable This Company to Better Accommodate Its Patrons. ' The Swiss International Loan agency, with headquarters at Mount Vernon, has made many loans in Illinois. Mr. Timothy Gruaz represents the agency and has addressed the following letter to his patrons: "To My Many Patrons in Southern Illinois In answer to numerous in quiries relative to the probable future" actlor. of this international loan agen cy I beg to state that I represent sever al Swiss oapitalists, true and steady Republicans of the old school, all with out any reservation favoring the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver at the American ratio of 16 to 1 as the shortest road to general pros perity here and abroad, and further, that should the free coinage of sliver prevail -I expect to accommodate my client much better in the future than in the past Tours for free thought, free coinage, and above all, free men. "TIMOTHY GRUAZ." The Intelligence of the World. Senator Teller says "the coUge pro fessors of Europe are all. on the side of bimetallism; the , leading European financiers of Europe those who have made finance a study are on the 4de of a double standard, and no silver man need be afraid that the intelli gence of the worlf is not on his side. , "We fought Great Britain once under the bimetallic system, we fought a neighboring country under it, and we rougnt unaer it me grsatesx nvu ever wagteV . .i Piper as Jurist. Secretary of State Piper has decided the contest cases which have been pend ing before him tor several days, and in his decision he gives to the goldbug democrats all they ask for and shots out the middle-of-the-road republicans from appearing on the ballot. The sec retary of the state iu his decision has duplicated the act of the juggler who, in full sight of the audience fills the bottle with hydrant water and then pours out a glass of wine or of bilgewater from the some small-necked bottle as the whim seizes him. t Both the goldbug democrats and the middle-of-the-road republicans were in the position of bolting who refused to acquiesce in the decision of a national convention. Piper says that the gold bug democrats are entitled to recogni tion and the bolting republicans not. The cases were brought before the sec retary of state in the shape of protests against the certificates of nomination filed by the pretended democrats, who allege that they held a convention at Omaha October 1. This protest was filed by James C. Dahlman, chairman of the regular demo cratic state central committee, and the other protest was filed by J. P. Maule against the certificate of nomination of filed by F. L. Rose. Rose set up the claim that the nomination certified by him had been made by a convention o republicans which assembled at Lincoln on October 6. The secretary has as yet made public no formal written opinion or reason for his decision. In his opinion the secre tary has followed the theory that there was a convention held by the pretended bolting goldbug democrats, as certified, but that the convention as certified by Rose and the bolting republicans was not a convention, but was a "farce." In the testimony taken in the caBe of the protest by Dahlman it was shown that there were thirty to fifty republi cans at the Rose convention. The testi mony failed to show that anyone who participated in that convention, with a einglo exception, would fail to vote for the ticket there nominated. In the case of the bolting democrats, Euclid Martin l testified to the manner in which the "del egates" to the alleged democratic con vention held at Umana, October 1, were gathered together. it was not shown that a single county convention or district convention had been held to select delegates. He named over half a dozen men who were present at this pretended state convention. He did not show by his own nor was it shown by any other testimony in that case, that there were as many at the Euclid Martin convention as there were at the Rose middle-of-the-road republi can convention. v Martin acknowledged that the gold bue democrats of Nebraska were not recognized by the democratic national convention as representatives of the democratic party in Nebraska. He ad mitted that there was no county organi zation for the campaign maintained by this pretended democratic faction, and that he had called the "convention" after the meeting of the convention of "nation al democrats" at Indianapolis, and that his call was in accordance with the recommendation of the Indianapolis con It was shown positively that the demo cratic organization, which is recognized by the democratic national committee, is now represented in this state by James C. Dahlman as chairman of the demo cratic state central committee. At the same time, this pretended goldbug state convention was held at Omaha on Oc tober 1. It is shown by alleged certificates which were filed with the secretary of state that nominations were made by these alleged democrats of candidates for con gress in the Fourth congressional dis trict, . R. E. Dunpby of Seward, and in the Fifth congressional district, Ransom Proudflt being certified as their candi dates. These two were protested and the secretary of state in his decision holds that they are legally nominated and that they as well as the candidates for state offices and for presidential elect ors certified by the Euclid Martin crowd are entitled to go on the official ballot with the party designation "democrat" followed their names. In the Fourth congressional district there was a nomination of the middle-of-the-road republican, Elmer Cohncour, the certificate showing that he was named by a convention of republican electors of thit district. This is held by Secretary of state Piper to have been an "irregular convention and the nominee not entitled to recognition or use of the word "republican" as a party designa tion.'.. A great deal of curiosity is being ex pressed on the streets of Lincoln just now about what kind oi reasoning toe repub lican secretary used which enabled him to declare all bolting republicans "irreg ular" and all bolting democrats as en tirely regular and entitled to whatever they demanded. Last year it was Held by the secretary that he could not in quire into and determine which of two contending factions claiming to represent a party was entitled to recognition. This year he inquired into and deter mined between them. There is a story going around the streets to the effect that the republican managers and the half dozen former dem ocrats who are backing the JMiclid Mar tin pretenders held a conference recently at which it was decided what should be demanded of the secretary of state. This was that the goldbug democrats were to be recognized and the middle-of-the road republichns thrown out. It is said that a committee was appointed to wait upon the secretary of state and in sist that this policy be pursued by him. Whether this was actually the way it was brought about or not, the secretary has done exactly what this rumor por tended. ' The cases will all be taken to the sr.. nremc court at once, and a decision w .U probably be reached before the enJ of the week. The middle-of-the-road repub licans and democrats are determined to not let the matter stop where it now is. Attend the Chamberlain Commercial College, room 1 Lansing theatre 'build ing. Day and night school. We make a specialty of shorthand ana typewriting tf ' flliue Ui Cusfomnrs M The past week our business was far beyond our ex?:: nj store was thronged with customers and they all suasi t well satisfied with their purchases. Catlandsee ustHa vitzU WE WILL MAKE IT INTERESTING FOE. " o.ooo coooooooooooopo poo oooooooooo ooToooooooooooooooooooo.-fr DRESS GOODS 20 pieces Colza extra fine Satins, 84 in' wide; regular price 12Jfc, this week 14 pieces Damaese Dress Goods; regular price 20c, this week.. 10 pieces Chameleon Mohair Brillian tines, 84 inf. wide; regular price 25c, this week.... 16 pieces Jamestown Novelty Dress Goods, 86 inches wide, choice pat- Cterue, worth 50c; this week... : Storm Serge, navy blue, brown and black, 52 in. wide, worth 75c; this W60k a.f ,.(. lOo 17c 21c 43c 58c SHOES! SHOES! Of superior quality, the beet possible which 'can be had anywhere for the money. Fascinators. - Special prices 17c, 22c, 82c, 40c, 45c, 56c, 67c and 89c; regular prices from r 10 to 15 per cent more. : f Duck Lined Coats.' 11.12, 1.26, $1.68, fl.98, $2.25 and 2.70; regular prices, $1.25, l- $1.40, $1.75, $2.25, $2.50 and 3.00. TJNDERWEAE. 40 dozen Men's Sanitary Bhirts and Drawers, worth 40c; this week........ 80 dozen Men's Natural heavy wool Shirts and Drawers; regular price 75c, this week . 15 dozen Men's Sanitary wool fieeoed Shirts and Drawers; regular prion 8 1.40, this week Ladies' Ribbed Vc-t3. 15c. 22c. 29o and 43c; regular r . . 26c, 25c, 85c and 50c Bargains in Dhawb. 1 $1.75 all wool square Shawls, this wecx.......! 2.25 all wool square Shawls, this week 1 2.50 all wool square Shawls, this week. i 8.50 all wool double Shawls, this week....... 4.50 all wool (double Shawls, this week...... t: 6.00 all wool double Shawls, this wesk 6.75 all wool double Shawls, this week...... C10 Jottonado Panto. 75c grade this week C . $1.00 grade this week... .r.... t 1.25 grade this week. t. 1.50 grade this week.... 1. Hats and Caps. BUY OF DS AND SAVE UC::Z1. 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000009000 1 FRED. SCHMIDT & BF. 921 O St. Opposite PoBtoffico, Lincoln, I Jc" i BR VAN ELECTORS. Voters who desire to record their pref erence for Bryan and free silver should not be permitted to forget that another than a Bryan electoral ticket will be plac ed upon the official ballot as democrats by collusion and conspiracy between repub licans and goldbug bolters from demo cracy. This is a scheme upon the part of the allied gold standard conspirators to create confusion in themindsof voters, in the hope that men who desire to vote for Bryan may by mistake vote for the other so-called democrats. It is an out rage upon the voters and a violation of the spirit of the Australian ballot law that this attempted deception is per mitted, but as long as the forces of evil prevail the battle of the righteous must be the more vigorous. Friends of Bryan and free silver must see that the voters are educated as to which are the Bryan electors, and that they will know how to distinguish between the democrats and the bolters when they get into the election booths. Rlpans Tabules: for sour stomach. Bryan la lSSSl ' "Thn may think that you have burled the cause of bimetallism; you may congratulate yourselves that you have laid the free coinage of silver away In a sepuloher, newly-made since the elec tion, and before the door rolled the veto stone. But, sirs, If our cause le just, as I believe It 'is, your labor has been in vain! no tomb was ever made so strong that It could Imprison a righteous cause. Silver will lay aside its grave clothes and Its shroud. It will yet rise, and in its rising and iti reign will bless mankind." Beware of Ointments for Oatanb that Contain Mercury. u rn.rea.ry win surely destroy th. sense of im.ll sad completely derange tb. whole system wh.n entering It through th. mucous surfaces. Such article, ahoold never ba need except on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, as th. dr. nag. they will do I. t.n fold to th. (rood yon can pos sibly derlr. from them. Hall's Catarrh Car., manufactured by F. J. Cheney a Co., Toledo, 0 contains no mercory, and Is taken Internally, acting directly npon th. blood and mucous sur faces ol the system, In baying Hall's Catarrh Cnr.be sareyoa get the genuine. It la taken Internally, and made In Toledo, Ohio, by P. i, Cheney A Co. Testimonials free. Sold by druggists, pries 75o per bottle. Insurance Department . Conducted by 3. T. M. Swlgart. Correspondence solicited. If there is a member of any mutual in- surance company in Nebraska who will lend his influence to help put A. S.Church ill back into the high office of attorney general he is surely not a worthy mem ber. Churchill has shown himself un worthy the confidence of any mutual man. Mr. Churchill's attitude on the subject of mutual insurance was well known by the convention that nomi nated him and yet he was put on the ticket through the influence of the stock companies when the mutuals were well represented and fighting him to a man. If he should be re-elected would he not fight the mutuals even if be had to go out of his way to do so. Every one knows that to be a popu list is to be in favor of mutual insurance. Hence every man who was nominated at Hastings is in favor of our local com panies doing our own business. J. F. Cornell is a farmer and has held a policy in mutuals for years and when he goes into, the auditors office will no doubt do his whole duty to protect the interest of the members of all companies, stock companies as well as mutual companies. The attitude of the. governor is well known and every member of every mu tual company shonld see to it that the name of Holcomb, Cornell, and Smythe has an X opposite their names on elec tion day. . THEY WERE ALWAYS TRAITORS. Read Ewing Clothing Co's ad on fifth page and govern yourself accordingly. From Washington Down. A Nest of them in New York, "We may not abide by the decision," said Edward Lauterbach at a million aires' banquet in referring to the possi bility of Bryan's election. The man who uttered these words is chairman of the New York republican committee, hence their significance as voicing the senti ment of the money power and of Wall street. Manhattan island has always been a center of disloyalty from the days of 1776. It is dominated by the greed of wealth, and the mouey-making influences of the commercial spirit. There has never been a day since the Declaration of Independence was signed when it would not sacrifice the national honor and the national welfare in order to put money in its purse. If now in the Bee ond century of the republic its residents attempt to set aside the verdict of the American people, fairly and honestly ex pressed at the ballot box, those whose will it would thwart will take supreme delight in digging up the island and scattering its treasonable dirt into the sea. MILLINERY fliW m(VI"' v "7 Kli And dressmaking very cheap. We have a large Btock of fine millinery; prices lowest. Sadie Puckett, 1238 O street, Up Stairs. 1 HAVE BEEN CALLED A.RCHIST BECAUSE 1 1IAV. ED THE TRUSTS AND ETI. WHICH WOULD UAtUT COUNTRY. I AM GLAD r. THE OPPOSITION C? T I AM GLAD THAT 13 I ED THERE IS NOT A . SYNDICATE THAT CAN i ME AND SAY, I FHERE, NOW PAY U3 1 WILLIAM JOTNINC3 I".T ' Bridge Koc Notice Is hereby given that " ' received up to November 91, 1 office of the county clerk of k for the construction oluH tu brldxe across th. Key Paha r tion line between section Iff and it range 17. Bald bridga to beta plans and specifications now oa t -of the eonntv clert of said connty. . paid for in 1S96 bridge warrants. H. t, 2s Ct I iri w W i V fli w 7 1 a SautOiott - artim jnata. many wage eaalatsaaav- -MtoW Sttatkia - KmIJm 4 qaick tnua I--ate afeeai aw a. aaanias saS I raraaveaa tM fart a i mi ii . ' Ikat oul fe- " aaa lalau ikeaaatau ataf... Cut 1 a a -rtl wa -wa will tm aJiiitMraw . Salaay 7J7 - Wanted-ftn ld:if Protect your Ideas: they rnsy r Write JOHN W10DERBt7R ft W, ! neys. Washington, D. C for Ur V ' and list of two hundred Inyanuuoa IK w J.LBALL&O GHPJ IDFOaZtfUH Worth It's Weight In For vuur name and addresti on a uoaW. will tell you haw to mnka the beat wir y on earth, horse-high, bull-i- Rig-tight, t tl-e actual whnlexaiaco:-..... t itselman Bros. BvxB. Ridvvili, $ i XliCRSIlDER: Fly' 'Ingwiud mill, a I lgfin. in, made to attach t size or make of ' and grind all Kit A wonderful machine, v manufacturer of Steel Wind Ifcii . V. fJ E. B. WINGER, Station R. C:.r MM S ST? l, tvA4llllIil!iVI - 1 a r fell JL' m m mi m at ii f HHUniiiiu wfrjL. Picket Loft- Steel Posts, Bteel Ralls and Steal OM-at? feKALB FENCE CO. ia r,a (Q total JKpn THY, ! trds SaYeslo " . fv3BW 1 ir ? !' i I I 1 i , facto tal-lHWwt Tww t V